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Authors: Joachim Njagi, Mary M. Mugambi, Hannah W. Kang’ara, and Dickson K. Nkonge
Publisher: Bleeding Ink Scribes Publishing Ltd (2025)
ISBN: 978-9914-9506-8-7
Review by: Bonface Otieno Okinyi


Introduction

The DNA Perspective of Immortality presents a bold intellectual undertaking that traverses the twin towers of empirical science and theological reflection. The authors attempt to bridge centuries of tension between religious orthodoxy and genetic empiricism by addressing a timeless human yearning: the quest for eternal life. The text provides a sweeping interrogation of genetic science, the Christian theological tradition, and existential philosophy, weaving these strands into a narrative that speculates on whether DNA—deoxyribonucleic acid—may be the vessel of eternal life, both metaphorically and potentially literally.


Major Problems Addressed

The core problem interrogated in the book is human mortality—its inevitability, its meaning, and whether it is, in fact, biologically necessary. The authors tackle several interrelated intellectual challenges:

By addressing these questions, the book opens a broader ethical debate about what it means to be human in an age of rapidly evolving biotechnology.

The central tension in the book lies in the ontological and epistemological conflict between scientific reductionism and spiritual transcendentalism. Is the human being reducible to molecular code? Or is there an immaterial essence—the soul—that transcends genetics?

While genetics suggests a material continuity through DNA (the “immortality” of genes), Christian theology insists on a spiritual immortality—the persistence of the soul beyond physical death. The book seeks not to resolve this dichotomy but to harmonise it, arguing for a complementary relationship: DNA may be the physical carrier of divine intention and thus a vessel for immortality. This book explores other important issues like:

a) Theological Anthropology

The book probes theological questions of identity, creation, and resurrection. It aligns human DNA with scriptural references like the “Book of Life” and the “Word made flesh,” suggesting that DNA may be the physical manifestation of divine authorship.

b) Posthumanism and Ethical Frontiers

Discussions on cloning, synthetic biology, and digital consciousness open up posthuman concerns. If we can digitally reconstruct or clone individuals, what ethical lines are crossed?

c) Spiritual Metaphysics

The authors explore whether DNA might act as a metaphysical antenna—receiving divine signals—and whether spiritual disciplines (like prayer or meditation) can impact gene expression, referencing epigenetics.

d) Scripture and Immortality

Passages from John 3:16, 1 Corinthians 15, and Psalms are drawn upon to support theological claims that life is divinely encoded and that resurrection may involve a kind of “genetic glorification” (i.e., perfected DNA).

Though this is a nonfiction/philosophical work, the “characters” are ideological positions and metaphors:

While people continue to ask pertinent questions on issues life, death and life after beyond death, this book is culturally relevant in the current society in the following ways

Literary and Rhetorical Styles

a) Socratic Inquiry

The book uses a questioning tone throughout, avoiding dogmatism. It invites readers into a conversation, not a sermon or a scientific lecture.

b) Metaphorical Language

Frequent metaphors liken DNA to a “book”, a “code”, a “vessel”, or a “divine signature”, creating theological resonance.

c) Juxtaposition and Parallelism

Chapters alternate between scientific exposition (e.g., cellular senescence, telomeres, aging) and theological reflection (e.g., resurrection, divine image, glorified bodies).

d) Intertextuality

Biblical texts are placed side by side with molecular biology findings (e.g., John 1:1 beside genetic transcription), producing a powerful dialogic effect.

e) Academic Referencing

The book includes multiple scientific citations and footnotes, showing intellectual rigour and grounding its speculative theology in real research.

Conclusion

The DNA Perspective of Immortality is a provocative, deeply engaging work that dares to bridge the sacred and the scientific. It reframes eternal life not as an abstract theological promise, but as a question encoded in our very being. Whether one agrees with all its conclusions or not, the book compels us to rethink mortality, personhood, and destiny in the age of gene editing and theological decline.

This is a book for theologians, geneticists, philosophers, and anyone grappling with what it means to be human. It is not the final word—but it is a powerful and needed invitation to the conversation.


Reference

Njagi, J., Mugambi, M. M., Kang’ara, H. W., & Nkonge, D. K. (2025). The DNA Perspective of Immortality: A Fusion of Faith and Science. Bleeding Ink Scribes Publishing Ltd

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